Kothavalasa–Kirandul line

Kothavalasa–Kirandul line belongs to Waltair Railway Division of East Coast Railway Zone from 2003. It was under South Eastern Railway zone until 2003. It passes through three states - Andhra Pradesh, Odisha and Chhattisgarh.

Kothavalasa–Kirandul line
Kothavalasa–Kirandul line passes
through Araku Valley in Visakhapatnam district
Overview
StatusOperational
LocaleAndhra Pradesh, Odisha, Chhattisgarh
TerminiKothavalasa
Kirandul
Stations48
Operation
Opened1966
OwnerIndian Railway
Operator(s)South Eastern Railway Zone Till 2003 March, East Coast Railway zone from April 2003
Technical
Track length445 km (277 mi)
Number of tracks1
Track gauge1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) Broad gauge
Electrification25 kV AC 50 Hz
Route map
km
to Pendruti
0 Kothavalasa
to Vizianagaram
9 Mallividu
15 Lakkavarupukota
26 Shrungavarupukota
33 Boddavara
45 Shivalingapuram
52 Tyada
62 Chimidipalli
71 Borra Guhalu
82 Karakavalasa
90 Shimiliguda
103 Araku
112 Gorapur
Andhra Pradesh state
Odisha state
125 Darliput
135 Padua
145 Bheja
156 Machhakunda
169 Paliba
177 Suku (SXV)
177 Suku (SUKU)
188 Koraput
189 Koraput Cabin B
195 Manabar
204 Jarti
215 Maligura
222 Chattriput
229 Jeypore
238 Dhanapur Orissa
246 Khadapa
250 Charamula Kusum
261 Kotapur Road
Odisha state
Chhattisgarh state
269 Ambagaon
279 Amagura
287 Nakati Semra
293 Jagdalpur
302 Kumar Maranga
310 Topokal
316 Bade Arapur
327 Dilmili
338 Silak Jhori
347 Kumar Sadra
360 Kaklur
372 Kawargaon
381 Dabpal
392 Gidam
400 Dantewara
412 Kamalur
424 Bhansi
434 Bacheli
443 Kirandul
Manabar railway station in Koraput district.

History

In 1960, Indian Railway took up three projects: the Kothavalasa  Araku  Koraput  Jeypore  Jagdalpur  Dantewara  Kirandaul line, the Jharsuguda  Sambalpur  Bargarh  Balangir  Titlagarh Project and the Biramitrapur  Rourkela  Bimlagarh  Kiriburu project. All the three projects taken together were popularly known as the DBK Project or the Dandakaranya  Bolangir  Kiriburu project.[1] The Kothavalasa–Kirandaul line was opened in 1966–67 under S E Railway with financial aid of Japan for transporting Iron ore.[2]

Geography

This line passes hill sections of Eastern ghats through Araku Valley. The line has a total of 58 tunnels and 84 major bridges and each tunnel is as long as 520 metres.

Electrification

Electrification of the line was completed in four phases. Kirandul–Jagdalpur section was completed in 1980. Jagdalpur–Koraput section was completed in 1981. Koraput–Araku–Waltair section was completed in 1982. The Kothavalasa–Kirandul route was completely electrified by 1982.[3]

Jurisdiction

The line has a length of 445 km (277 mi),out of which 138 km (86 mi) lies in Andhra Pradesh up to Gorapur which will be joining South Coast Railway, rest of the line will remain in the Rayagada division of East Coast Railway 131 km (81 mi) lies in Odisha up to Khadapa, 194 km (121 mi) lies in Chhattisgarh up to Kirandul. The maximum route Km being in Chhattisgarh and Andhra Pradesh with Odisha taking 3rd position. [4] The Kothavalasa-Kirandul section is classified as a Group E-special class line in which speed should be below 100 km/h.[5]

Performance

This line is mainly used for freight purposes which is a huge profit benefitting Waltair Division. Nearly 3,000 crore (US$420 million) of profit comes through this line. Iron ore from Bailadila are transported to Visakhapatnam through this line.[6]

References

  1. Baral, Chitta. "History of Indian Railways in Orissa" (PDF). Retrieved 12 December 2012.
  2. "History of Waltair Division". Mannanna.com. Archived from the original on 11 October 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  3. "IR Electrification History". IRFCA. Retrieved 23 January 2013.
  4. "Doubling of line between Kirandul, Kothavalasa mooted". The Hindu. 7 March 2008. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  5. "Chapter II – The Maintenance of Permanent Way". Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  6. "kirandul line news".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.